If you're interested in that sort of thing and in the bay area, sounds like it will be interesting.
More information at Liminal Existence.
The common wisdom in the Rails community at this time is that scaling Rails is a matter of cost: just throw more CPUs at it. The problem is that more instances of Rails (running as part of a Mongrel cluster, in our case) means more requests to your database. At this point in time there's no facility in Rails to talk to more than one database at a time. The solutions to this are caching the hell out of everything and setting up multiple read-only slave databases, neither of which are quick fixes to implement. So it's not just cost, it's time, and time is that much more precious when people can['t] reach your site.I have yet to meet a Rails developer who honestly thinks that Rails (in its current form) is a highly scalable framework, unless they come from a design background or a java background. Two backgrounds who ultimately shouldn't be allowed to discuss efficient, affordable scaling in any serious tone. ;)
Full interview here